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lindenhurst,ny
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I was wondering if anyone has any marine plants in there tanks like halimeda,shaving brush, maidenhair, etc.I was gonna buy a piece last night but I wasn't sure how well they do in our reef tanks.they probally would look pretty nice in a tank .if they live.
 

Marcellina

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Merrick, NY
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I think I asked this questions on this site when I first started. I was dissuaded from putting them in bc certain types of plants put up runners underneath the sand and can grow out 0f control.. Im not 100% positive but that is something to think about. Im sure someone with more experience will chime in!

They are very cool looking though I agree!
 

Marcellina

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Merrick, NY
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That is the prettiest choice. It looks like linked little coins :) I *think* that might be the least invasive of the choices you listed. I have read that they reproduce by runners but I have also read that they reproduce by 'hold fasts'. Im no expert but I have read that not only is it pretty it will help reduce your nitrates and phosphates.

I have a small piece with yellow polps attached that I inherited from someone of it in a 10G tank I have, it only has a coralife 28W 50/50 light and its doing good, I do water changes to keep the calcium up. I have no sandbed in the 10G. I have read and heard they need alot of light, maybe that is when they grow a little faster? The one I have is just happy on its little rock with the neighboring polyps.
 

Dre

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NY/NJ
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Thanks for the info I was thinking of like the halimeda which is a calcerous plant I don't think that grows to fast I would make a reef tank look good though
See ,looks cool but Halimeda suck up alot of Calcium every plant,animal whatever has it's advantage /disadvantage.
 

Marcellina

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Merrick, NY
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Yes that is right DRE, I guess its good in my 10G as its the only thing in there that would use calcium. SO the weekly water change is good for my little frag.

Charlie do you dose Calcium in your tank? If not you should definitely start adding some if you add the halimeda. I use the B-Ionic in my display and the difference just in my LPS is amazing.
 

zook

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It's pretty much like gardening except you're doing it underwater. Even with runners, you can still easily control growth of macro algae with regular monitoring and pruning.

My planted tank when it was at its best:

3853947159_8431639fd2.jpg


3854736304_a78f429d66.jpg
 

basiab

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Location
secret
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Halimeda,shaving brush, maidenhair nice and will not take over your tank. They are very slow growers. But I found it hard to keep them. I was never able to keep one alive for more than 6 months.
 

Reef Greek

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Location
Long Island
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Nice planted tank.
There are some very nice looking macros out there just saw a dragons tongue(awesome little plant) and want one myself. Halimeda are slow growing not too invasive and do help water quality BUT they do absorb a lot of calcium and will die off without it so you need to dose.
 

Aerowen

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Location
LI
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zook, that planted tank is really nice. I used to have some dragon's tongue in a previous tank and it always did great,but never really grew for me.
 

adamt

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Location
westchester ny
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i have halimeda in my tank and it looks awesome... it changes color through out the day from almost white in th morning to a dark green by the time i get home from work. I have a rock that has some wierd calurpa on it almost looks like a bunch of little green mushrooms growing off of runners and some red algae that looks like dragons breath minus the bright trim. I've always been a fan of keeping macro in my reef tanks you just need to keep it under control and remove any that starts to bleach out.

Ive heard it secretes something that is detrimental to coral growth, and i know it uses nutrients (part of the reason i like it in the tank, it seems to out compete other algaes that i dont want and keeps phosphates in check) but all in all ive never had a problem with it. My other love when it comes to aquariums is planted tanks so adding some flora to my sw always seemed like a natural thing to do. The main thing, like everything else in this hobby, is that you stay vigilant and dont let it get out of control, and seriously, keep an eye out for bleached out pieces.
 

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